Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 24 Jun 1948, 1, p. 4

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Thank you Mr. Kennedy for the free publicity you gave The Porcupine Advance on Saturday n‘ght. We appreciate every bit of it as we haven’t the cash reserve and we don't take up a col- lection to put the Porcupine Advance on the air. Every little bit helps in times like these. What we like more was the forthright Speech of your “st00ge” who attached this paper as being anti-la- bor. We like that Anti-labor tag. It will make a lot of people read the paper who have never read it before. It will make them read it more carefully in the future. Thanks again, 13111., We like peOple to really read our paper and find out just what we are try- ing to do with paper and ink. That’s all a paper is when you buy it on the stand, but it becomes something more if people read what the editor writes. It was a pleasure to hear that one of your boys had given us a verbal going over on the air. We didn‘t think you read our paper so thoroughly. Attacking us for our offâ€"the-cufi‘ writing and apparent incons‘s- tencies was OK. Bill, but when your man attacked Victor Riesel as being antirlabor we felt sorry indeed.’ We have had some good conversat‘ons Bill, but by saying that Riesel is anti- labor you have but your foot in it. Vic Riesel is probably the best labor writer of modern times. He is a man imbued with the ideal of labo1 and management un .ted. He knows that it is piactically impossible under the present set-up of hate and fear but he is doing every- thing he can to cement relations without getting too far over 011 ei- ther side. Riesel has been damned by some labor men, but they have all been members of the Communist International. Top la- bor men in the United States and England admire and t1ust Vic t01 'iesel £01 his amazing eiudition and ability to mint the lac ts 11(- curately. Riesel sees what the Communists are doing to the Trade Labor movement, which was founded on the sweat, blood and brains 01‘ laboring men. He sees all this and reports it, fairly and accur- a_tely. Management respects Victor Riesel for his plain talk on the re- sponsibilities of management to labor and vice-versa. Riesel has often printed bitter articles but he never seems to lose his faith in the inate goodness in man. He likes the great American and Can- adian Dream. . .that labor and management will hammer out their differences suitably if left alone to do so without too much govâ€" crnment interference or interference from Uncle Joe’s comrades. When the editor of this paper arrived in this town he wasn’t so sure that the new group could work out a solution to their prob- lem. He was not so sure that they had the strength to start a new union and make it stick. He heard so many conflicting stories of the abilities 0f the Variousmen 'forming the newJOrganizing Committee that he just waited to see what was going to happen. Much has happened in the seven short weeks. Vachon, Behie, Jones, and the Carlin Brothers have shown themselves to be tough and active labor men. Whatever has been amiss in their organiz- ing talents they have made up in sincerity. They bel‘cved in their cause and were not afraid to carry it through. This takes more than just talkers and (lo-nothings which this editor was led to believe they all were. But let us not loose focus on the most important part of this cam- paign for membership of the Timmins Organizing Committee Mine and Mill Workers. These are not just a bunch of fellows who were unable to get the other fellows to play ball with them and let them be pitcher all the time. They found it shifling to work with the men from Moscow and found that they could do little to remedy the situation or bring the attention of the parent union (CCL) to the matter. The break accomplished this as those who follow these columns every week now know. The CCL has been started out of its lethargy and dream world into reality and has sent word to the American CIO to keep their organizers South of the Border as far as possible. Too, the CCL has become interested in their small but thriving erring offspring. They were. no doubt puzzled like any parent, at the seeming ingratitude of this group. Authorized Ins-second class matter by the Post Office Department. Otzaw In union there is strength. Labor men have been bewildered by the break in the union's ranks. Many of them have been led to believe many things about the Organizing Committee’s men which have proven false. They now see that the Organizing Committee is the only way out of a bad situation which could only be remedied by quick surgery. The new organization is covering the alotted ground so successfully that our plant labor eXpert believes that they will be ready for a charter before the end of July. That is fast work for any organization, and especially so When the rival or- ganization was led by a man of such fine personality as Bill Ken- nedy. Bill Kennedy really believes in his cause just as the others believe in theirs. He has continued in a very efficient manner to carry out the various duties of his office as organizer for Local 241. Rumours of telephone calls, rumours of company financing have been kicked in the teeth by Vachon and group and they are car- rying on as if they hadn’t heard a word. Actually that isthe best way to carry through anything of this nature. If they had spent the new union’s funds indiscriminatly on radio programs to blast unsuspecting editors they would have defeated their own ends. After moving into Timm‘ns Hardware buildng the Organiz- ng Committee boys decided to enlarge the premises to suit their needs. A wall was to be torn down and the Advance Photographer took a picture of Buck Behie, organizer extraordinary, pointing to the wall which was to be torn asunder by the miners. In the rm dio speech. here we go harping again on that speech, last Saturday, Kennedy’s boy mentioned that The Advance would take a picture of anything Buck Behie did, even when he stood and pointed at the wall. Touche. But if Kennedy will look closely at the pic- ture he will see something else which isn’t apparent to those with- out in the fascist salute "nor has he the fist clenched in-the Com- out in the fasc‘st salute nor has he the first clenched in the Com- rade‘s greeting. There‘il be another radio speech, sure. Another point which we can’t avoid is the fact that Vachon and group are following the columns of Victor Riesel avidly. They don't think him anti-labor and they believe that he has a lot on the ball. They feel that we are giving a service to labor which is unparalleled in the North. Let us ass‘iire them that Riesel was picked with care and after much wrestling with doubts as to his use to the men of this district. He is an old friend and known by the edtor for some time. We are glad that laboring men of the Porcupine Gold Camp and the Abit‘bi Paper plants find Riesel a friend in these troubled times. flehave also had many nice words about Riesel locally from mine managers and we are glad of that. Management is willing to do business with labor when labor talks with reason. We’ll be sure to llsten in this Saturday night! PAGE FOUR lenben Cam Woekly NW mun"; Ontatlo- NW Mao- Guam um Per Year. Timmins, Ontario, Thursday, June 24th, 1948 05b: flurcupine mutants PHONE 28 Thank You Mr. Kennedy Published every Thursday by flerton W. Lake coo :sm Subscription Rates: ONTARIO United States: “.00 Per Year "Those days; Chief Ernie Roy used to fill his police court docket with cases of men charged with exceeding the speed limit in their scows, or tra- velling without lights on their canoes, or running 0 rowboat while drunk!" contributed another in the party. “But that was in Tisdale. not Tim- m‘nas!" persisted the man who had lived nineteen years. Eventually the man of nineteen years of life exclaimed: » “Well, anyway, tnqt's one thing that Timmins has never had. and that's a. Heed!" “What about the floods last. year when the old Mattagami tore loose?" asked the man of forty-eight. winters. “Oh. that was in Mountjoy town- ship. not Timmins!" was the prompt reply. one man in'ihe little group, “showing that street looking like one of- the canals of Venice, with people living only in the upper stories of their houses, and boats plying up and down on the streets.” Others in that‘group in the Golden Arrow Cafe recalled the floods that for years were a regular annual feature at South Porcupine. Porcupine Lake mad :1 habit of overflowing and flood- ing wide areas of South Porcupine. That nineteen-year old fellow of fifty finally won the argument. But. he was wrong. These floods may not have been seiious but thev did cause much pro- tokinp; damage. cellais being filled, and long boots being the only footwear for those living in the area.‘ 'In April of 1917, the water Was so anhoying’ in these blocks that Chief Borland and his staff were requisitioned to use" the fire engine to pump the flood water over the brow of the little hill. Six hundred fett of hose were attached to the engine. and a double shift of men kept on the work. The fire en- gine was said to pump that water at the rate of 550 gallons a minute. but The other night a group at Junie: old-timers wet-e discussing the float in British Columbia. One of the group was a man of some fifty years «.1 age. but he had lived only nineteen years, that being the length ct time he had resided in Tanmlns. Another was a man of forty-five. but he could claim to have seen forty-eight win- texs for he had lived in Timmim six- teen years. “Why. I have photographs of Rall- road Street South Porcupine.” said Is there anything on earth, good or bad. or in between, that any other place has ever had, that Timméns has not suffered, or enjoyed? The answer to that question is the very decided Russian reply, “No!" Of course. Timmins has had its floods! In the early days, before the streets were graded below Birch Street, there were small floods after each spring thaw, the blocks between First ave- nue and Second avenue, and between Birch street and Maple street, being particularly affected. You have all been very good children for the last couple of weeks. Nurse tells me the house hasn't been set afire ev- en once. and as a reward. Uncle Robert will tell you today the story of Beauty and the Beast. Beauty was the youngest of three daughters. Beauty’s old man was a speculator in cotton and wheat fu- tures. All the girls were pretty, but Beauty was a killer. When she won her first beauty contest, at the age of 2, everybody said she would go far. it took a couplé of days before' the water was pumped away faster than Uncle Bob Ruark’s Little Fable M G. A. “Bedouin ’.-..-«o.-v~>e-4~:.¢WMWM WWW Our girl friend was about 14, and the other sisters were young ladies,, when the old man overreached himself in the commodity market and went for his wad. What wheat didn‘t get. cot- ton ‘did. and Beauty’s papa was strand- ed without a buck to bless himself with. <4~>wveux :~:-. -:-:~:«:~: ~:-:~::-:m::: ..:..:..c..:.. :«~:-:~:-: :-.-:-:-.-:-W-:~¢¢ E1ln (the ways When the porcupincE E Was young E The two sisters didn't care. because they’d been fluttering around in society and they figured 0t take up the op- tlcn en a couple of willing boy friends with dough in the bank. But a funny thing: soon as Father blew hs 11011, the rich boys went oh“ and started courting same .fi'esh talent. These sisters moaned and groaned and yearned for riches, but that‘s all they did. Beauty never quit trying. She wor- ked in the five-and-dlme all day, and all evening long she practiced accom- plishments. She learned to tap-dance She leaxned to shake 'hex shoulders and sell a torch song. She practiced speak- ing in front of the mirror, and the neighbors all thought she was nuts, because she walked around for hours with an encyclopedia on her head. Directions: Make tea exactly as usual. . While siill hot pour into glasses filled with cracked ice ‘. ; '. Add sugar and lemon Io iasle : '.‘ ‘.' E©E© TBA Delicious ,Cool Drink No. 57. When Dams and Damns Broke Loose in Timins TEE PORCUPIN'E ADVANCE. TIMMINS. ONTARIO The next year. J. D. Multan. then town iorenmn. constructed a ditch or Beauvoir. on Birch street. to handle the surplus water. That ditch. or re. - ervoir. did relieve the situation that year. but on Armistice Night it came close to relieving the town of three of its happy citizens who made a tour 0! much of Jack‘s ditch. or res- ervoir. and came within an ace of rail- ing in together. Each year durlng the early days of the town. spring floods also did dam- age on parts of Sixth Avenue and in- tersecting streets. Water poured down from Spruce street, sneaking into cel- lars along Sixth Avenue. and making each year a partlcuarly mean attack on the neat and comfortable little home and the plea-sing garden prcperty at the corner of Balsam Street and Sixth Avenue. Storm sewers in 1925 can- celled that line of little fl':;ods. It travelled to Birch Street. Andy Scab was the engineer tn charge. with Sun Ilclcod running the engine. and Charlie Bax-turd firing. Perhaps some may think that these minor rushes of water can scarcely be dignified by the term. “floods." Those who suffered from them. however. cal- led them much worse than “flocd’e.” In any case, Timmms can boast of two visitations in 1917't_hat waranted the name of “floods" in any language. At that time there was a little lake between the T. N. 0. Railway yard; and the Hollinger Mine. The north and west sides of this lake had been carefully damned to prevent the wa- ter over-running the roadways and the land adjacent. «Previous to the breaking of! the d-yke, the lake was calâ€" led Miller Lake, in honour of one of the stakers of the Holllinger property. What the lake was called when the dam broke is not for publication. La- ter, as the lake filled up with the “slimes” from the mine it was genei- ally referred to as “The Slimes." It should be noted that much filling- in of the land along the east end of Fourth Avenue has taken place since 1917. The public school grounds have been raised several feet, and the ra- vine along the Pine street isde of the school grounds has been filled in where the old bridge sidewalk did duty. classes were put out of commission. Most of the school children had to be given; holidays, but the Entrance classes were transfered to the council cham- bers (then in the Courtemaitche block). Difficulty was experienced in repair- ing the dam. as when one spot was sufficiently strengthened, another sec- tion would give way. But eventually the damaged dyke was repaired, and all was well for a week or two. an April lst, 1917, however, that well- damned dam made April Fools of all concerned. Miller Lake broke through On March 15th‘ 1917, part of the dam at the end of the lake broke down and water poured through, flooding the road and sweeping into [buildings aolng Fourth avenue. One cf the chief victims of this flood was the public school prope1ty. when: the black tar- papered shacks that housed school At. 16. she was elected Miss North Wilkes-Barre. At 17 she was chosen Miss Pennsylvania She was Miss Slagpit Miss Scrapplc, and Miss Mush- room on sucecssive years When she turned 21, she came to Atlantic City and was chosen Miss America By this time, she was a knockout. She had eyes like Vivien Leigh, legs like Betty G1able. a t01so like Jane Russell and a mind like a steel trap. Beauty went to Hollywood. time, she was a knockout. She had eyes like Vivien Leigh, legs like Betty Grable. a torso like Jane Russell and a mind like a steel trap. Beauty went to Hollywood. She went under contract to a big studio, but for peanuts. and she never got a chance to act. All she did was pose for publicity stills and assorted chees-cake for the fan magazines. She used to cry in the Bor-wn Derby every night. as she munched her frugal meal of iRykrisp and milk. she was crying, a huge. gross man with a wart on his nose stopped by her table. Then Beauty met Brentwood Beam- ish, who worked for Repulsive Studios. He was the hottest thing since Valen- tino and every time he sighed, 9000 women shot their husbands. After Brentwood. The Beast seemed to get uglier and uglier. The night she won her first Oscar. Beauty filed for divorce, changing men- tal cruelty, citing her husband’s face as Exhhbit A. ' Under California law. she got half his property, including the One night. as big house at Belair and the little house at Palm Springs, plus a'cash settle- ment of $500,000. Beauty married Brentwood the .next day, and The Beast “I am Morris J. iMan-nerheim, .the pro- ducer at Stupendous Studios," he said. “May I help you?” "Yes," Beauty said, automatically (she had been in Hollywosd a long time). Then she looked up and gasp- ed, because Morris J. Mannerheim was the ugliest. man she had ever seen. He lcoked like Lon Chaney with overtones of Gargantua. The employees on the Stupendous lot always called him The Beast. The Beast was very kind to Beauty. He' took her everywhere. He bought up her contract and signed her to a Swen-Near termudth Stupendous at $100,000 a year. He cast her in the fe- male lead of every picture he produced. He smothered her with furs and-‘gems. The day she fin'shed her first. picture they wére married. She moved into again. The most pessimistic old-timer was ready to admit that thh was a (load. all right. A wild torrent of water broke through, {leading a wider area than in the previoua rehearsal. A new store. at. the north-east cor- ner of Fourth and Spruce. was swamp- ed. 80 were the public school bulld~ lugs. Dr. R. Brown's dental parlour and residence (on the corner where the post office now stands) We inun- dared. There were six inches of wa- ter in the cells at the police station. the prisoners having to be trancterred to the provincial jail at South Porc- upine. The highway on Spruce street was no longer a roadway. but a wa- terway. Possibly the most worried man those days was A. R. Globe, assistant gen- eral manage: of the Holl'nger. He felt very keenly his double responsibility as he was not only a Hcillnger offl- clal, but also one of the town coun- cillors. He had all the engineers and other experts he could summon to at- tempt to dam that flood. In his an- xiety he even questioned some of the experienced miners who come on their own time to watch the flood from safe level. One of these spectators was a hum- orous Nova Scotian in whom Mr. Globe had high confidence, knowing him as unusually clever. resourceful and com- petent in practical construction work. “Do you'think. Hec., that if I gave you a gang of men you could dam that damn dam?" Councillor Globe asked. “Well do you know of anybody we could get to do it?" was the next an- xious question. “There’s only one man who can stop that flood!” answered the Nova Scotian. “and I'm nor, sure he would work fox the Hollinger or even for the Town of Timmins. ' " “We 11 get him iight away!" snapped the councillox. “What' 3 his name, and where is he?" “It's too reply. More than the water was damned for that answer. Indeed, it was an ex- :ansive education in proficient, pic- turesque profanity to listen to the com- ments of officials and workmen as that dam was being repaired, and an- other section would oerak through as one was built up again. The officials may have used the more expansive phrases. but the workmen-had the edge on the emphatic cxpletives. By the time the lake had been com- pletely damned, it had also been ex- posively damned. Councillor Globe never admitted calling on the help sug- gested by Hec., but it did seem as if the Lord did give some valuable as- sistance, for the worst snow-storm in the history of this palt of the North came along in the eaily pait of Apiil and did so much to slow down the flood and so make 1epaiis to the dyke easie1 and more effective. In any case, there was never any more trouble about that double damned dam. “The only man I know that. can stop that flood is the Lord himself!" was the answer drawled out. his Belair mansion, and sent for her father and sisters that very day. In two years Beauty was acclaimed a star in her own right, and her contract rectified to call for two pictures a year at a cool quarter million each. as. Exhibit A. ' Under California. law. she got half his property, including the big house at Belair and the little house at, Palm Springs, plus a’cash settle- ment of $500,000. Beauty married Brentwood the next day, and The Beast drank himself to death in six months. There is a moral. children. It’s just that. if you’re beautiful, intellio gent. and industrious, you can always iind some chump who'll make you rich and famous. A strong stomach helps Cadet Major Harper Will Go To Banff George Harper who was cadet major for the annual inspection of Timmins High and Vocational School cadets this spring has been selected to attend the cadet, camp at Banfl which will be held {ram August 2 to 20. Cadet Harper was interviewed dur- ing the inspection by the inspecting officer of the district. Eight young men were chosen out of the Central Ccmmand and Cadet Harper has not only been honored with this selection but has brought honor to his school. He will report to Camp Ipperwash on July 20 tor proper outfitting for camp. At Banfl there is a model ca- det camp where advanced training will be carried out. All selections of men for the camp were made during ma inspecticn of the cadets in the wring. Principal A. A. Rose of T. H. and V. 6., is proud as punch of Cadet flamer's good furtune. much for me!" was the Pittsburgh -â€"â€"- Workers in American industry go through life plagued by a constant fear that some day they will suddenly lose their income by sickness or accident which will prevent them from keeping a job. They worry about their own inability to provide adequate medical protection for the wife and children. They look forward with apprehension to the day when the boss: comes around to tell them they are “too old" to be carried on the payroll. - That type of treatment is becoming more repugnant to the average American year by year. That calloused. soulless heartless treatment. is be- coming more and more distasteful. We in the United Steelworkers and CIO feel that it is about time (that the owners and leaders of American industry be made. to understand that they have a deep-rooted responsibility toward helping to lift those shad- ows of fear from the people who work in industry. Past. action of American industry shows that it is blind to the vital needs of the working'people. that it has no intention of moving in the direction of social insurance by voluntary action. Therefore. it remains for American labor unions to exert more and more pressure and develop increasing interest. in this vital subject of social insurance and adequate pensions. If we do so, the time may not be far distant when at least more satis- factory arrangements can be perfected through the mechanisms of collective bargaining to provide some measure of substantial relief not only to the wage earner. but also to his wife and dependents. The Congress. as it is constituted today. is hostile and reactionary: it is not prepared to give preper consideration to any type of legislation which has for its purpose improved social security benefits for American workers. In the absence of a willingness on the part of Congress to act, it be- comes imperative that American wage earners. particularly the group assoc- iated in labor unions, devote more or their time an energies toward estab- lishment of suitable insurance and pension program in the collective bar- gaining contract. An associate of William Kennedy. Organizer for Local 241 Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers Union attacked this column on the air last Saturday evening. “Anti-labour." was the cry. Anyone with‘any sense would be able to deduce the fact that Victor Riesel's column must be read by labour or Philip Murray and Wllliam Green would not write a guest column. This week we scrapped the regular Reisel column on Communist activities in the various: unions to bring you two columns by two labor men who are definitely on top of any labor situation and would not lend themselves to ridicule by being run under the banner of an antiolabor columnist. We are sorry that Bill Kennedy has been so outspoken against Riesei for he has lined himself with the Com- munist gang when he does that. Riesel is definitely‘ anti-communist, but, he is not anti~labour. The United Steelworkers of America has done a considerable amount of work in this field. It has brought forth actuarial facts that heretofore have never been developed in the field of collective bargaining. We know more about social insurance today than we ever did before. This union took the first major step in that direction during last year‘s negotiations with U. S. Steel â€"â€" bellwether in the steel industry. ”Big Steel" officials agreed to name a committee to sit down with a union committee and «talk about social insurance and pensions for the steelworkers. We are coming to have a better understanding and a greater apprec- iation of the benefits that flow to American wage earners and their dependents from suitable social insurance and pension plans when they are incorporated in the collective bargaining contract. In that series of meetings the United Steelworkers, after a great. deal." of research. was able to lay a concrete plan on the table. The union suggested that the industry could well afford to institute a pension system of $150 a month to steelworkers whose age prevents their further servfice in the industry. -- -~"-u 1"“4 ‘ of illness: maternity care for fiaothers'and child care years of age. The union suggested surgical care amounting to a maximum figure of $225 per employee. To put that over-all pension and social insurance program into effect would cost United States Steel Corporation about 23 cents per hour per em- ployee. Measured against the fantastic profit picture compiled by the steel industry during the war and postwar years, there is no question about the industry's financial ability to pay. .2 And even the industry can no longer argue against it: moral and social obligations to meet this problem. BY WILLIAM GREEN. President American Federation of Labor Washington â€"â€" We in America want no more wars. But hostile and- aggressive forces are still on the march in Europe. Soviet Russia, while “talking peace, has committed repeated acts of aggression against helpless dem- ocratic nations. t The Government of the United Stats is now launching a gigantic dc- fense program; Again we are going to spend billions of dollars for planes, for warships and for many new weapons of destruction. Again we are con- sidering such drastic measures as drafting the youth of the nation for training in the armed forces. But in the long run, the mere expenditure of money and the produc- tion of armament and the training of armies will not guarantee the security of our freedom against the threat of a communist invasion. For the favorite Communist tactic is to bore from within before at-~ tacking from without. Just as it has done in Czechoâ€"Slovakia and is doing in' France and Italy and countless other countries. the Soviet Government seeks .to promote revolution within America. Stalin’s first goal is to capture the trade union movement of the United States. Communist propaganda, day and night throughout the world, con- tinues to slander and villify our country and our free principles. Democracy. must be on guard. The American Federation of Labor stands as America's first line of defense against infiltration fo the labor movement. Our eight million mem- bers constitute a loyal legion. resolutely opposed to any appeals from Moscow and unswervingly true to our own country. We are Opposing the Communists actively and effectively on many fronts here and abroad. Another bitter example is the failure of Congress to take any action to check «rising prices or to approve vital housing. social security and mini»- mum wage legislation. With the cost of living still going up by leaps and: bounds. inflation is forcing many American families to reduce their standard of living. These victims of profiteering. who see their elected representatives: in Congress rushing to the relief of the wealthy with tax bonanzas while re- fusing to lift a finger to protect he mases of the peOple are ripe for conversion, by the Communists. Basically.- the loyal labor movement is being forced to contend against recationary forces who in their dread of Communism are trying to suppress all liberalism. They have yet to learn that the methods of repression and sup- pression will not work in America. This is a serious charge, but it is true - the Congress of the United States has repeatedly played right into the hands of Communists- One outstanding example was the enactment. of the Tait-Hartley Law, which deprives American workers of many of their basic freedoms and threat- ens to weaken the loyal trade union movement just at the time when it mu=t be strengthened to withstand the infiltration of Communism. Make no mis- take about it. the Communists have seized upon the Taft-Hartley Act as an effective propaganda weapon. ' We ask for no sreward for our patriotic endeavors. We have a job to do and its success will be reward enough. But we do not and should not; 0v. pect to be hambered and obstructed by our own government in our efforts to safeguard its survival. Yet that is exactly what has happened. râ€" -____ We hope to teach them that lesson in the November elections; We hope to ele‘ct a new Congress which will act promptly to halt any further in- creases in the cost of living and will encourage the gradual reduction of prices. We hope a new and more liberal Congress will attend at once to the important human needs of our peOple which have been so long neglected -~ such as a long-range housing program, changes in the minimum wage law to bring the 1300! up from the present pitiful level of $16 a Week to a more real- istic figure like $30 a wreck, and improved social security. -_ "9-1L ---.V~' This 15 the kind of program whcih will nulllfy any and all attempm; of the Communists to gain converts en masse among the American people. We must support and assist in a strong defence program to protect our nation from any possible attack from the outside by a foreign enemy. But let us not neglect to strengthen and invigorate our every-day democnfle life. so that no enemy philosophy can ever undermine and corrupt. our lnternal defenses. Finally, labor‘ looks to the new Hadley Law. Inside Labour C10 and United BY PHILIP by Victor Riesel 'D "' year; a $35 weekly payment during the period MURRAY. President Steelworkers of America THURSDAY_ JUNE 17th. 1M8 éongress to kiil the obnoxious Taft- for children under 18‘

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